Keene of the Dole campaign of helping to circulate the rumor, and Keene, speaking on a
television talk show, responded that Atwater was "a liar." Shortly thereafter, a "sex
summit" was convened between the Bush and Dole camps for the purpose of maintaing
correct GOP decorum even amidst the acrimony of the campaign. [fn 47]
Evans and Novak opined that "Atwater and the rest of the Bush high command,
convinced that the rumors would soon be published, reacted in a way that spelled panic to
friend anmd foe alike." On June 17, 1987, Michael Sneed of the Chicago Sun-Times had
written that "several major newspapers are sifting ...reported dalliances of Mr. Boring."
[fn 48] But during that summer of 1988, the Brown Brothers, Harriman/Skull and Bones
networks were powerful enough to suppress the story and spare Bush any embarrassment.
During the weeks before the election, the LA Weekly, an alternative paper in Los Angeles,
devoted an entire issue to "the dark side of George Bush." British newspapers like the
tabloid London Evening Standard repeated some details, but US news organizations were
monolithic in refusing to report anything; the Bush networks were in total command.
Then rumors began to fly that the Washington Post was preparing to publish an account
of Bush's sex pecadillos. On Wednesday, October 19, the New York Stock Exchange was
swept by reports that stories damaging to Bush were about to appear, and this was cited
as a contributing factor in a 43 point drop in the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The Wall
Street Journal and USA Today gingerly picked up the story, albeit in very vague terms.
The Wall Street Journal wrote that the Washington Post was preparing a story that "Bush
had carried on an extramarital affair," with a "report that he [Bush] has had a mistress for
several years." One of the allegations was that Bush had had an extramarital affair during
the mid-1970's with a woman who was no longer in his entourage.
Donna Brazile of the Dukakis campaign staff told reporters in New Haven, Connecticut:
"I wasn't on the stock market yesterday but I understood they got a little concerned that
George was going to the White House with somebody other than Barbara. I think George
Bush owes it to the American people to 'fess up...." "The American people have every
right to know if Barbara Bush will share that bed with him in the White House. I'm
talking about Barbara Bush and someone with the initials J.F. or whatever the names
are," said Ms. Brazile. Was this a reference to Jennifer Fitzgerald? A few hours later,
Donna Brazile, a young black woman who had also accused the Bushmen of using "every
code word and racial symbol to package their little racist campaign," was fired from the
Dukakis campaign. Paul Brountas, one of Dukakis's close advisers, said that he would not
accuse the Bush campaign of being racist. With the Willie Horton ads running full clip
everywhere, many could not believe their ears. After an Associated Press wire sent out on
Thursday, October 20 had offered another summary of the rumor, Bush's press aide
Sheila Tate dismissed the entire story as "warmed over garbage." [fn 49] But in the end,
the Washington Post published no story, and the entire issue was stifled by the brutal
power of the Bush media networks.
In the end, the greatest trump card of Bush's 1988 campaign was Bush's opponent
Michael Dukakis. There is every reason to believe that Dukakis was chosen by Bush
Democrat power brokers and the Eastern Establishment bankers primarily because he